Comparison Operators
There
are
three main comparison operators: < (less than),
> (greater than), and =
(equal to). They can be used individually, or any two operators can
be combined with each other. Their general syntax is:
result = expression1 <operator> expression2The resulting expression is True (-1),
False (0), or Null. A
Null results if and only if either
expression1 or
expression2 itself is
Null.
What follows is a list of all the comparison operators supported by
VB.NET, as well as an explanation of the condition required for the
comparison to result in True:
- >
expression1is greater than and not equal toexpression2.- <
expression1is less than and not equal toexpression2.- <>
expression1is not equal toexpression2(less than or greater than).- >=
expression1is greater than or equal toexpression2.- <=
expression1is less than or equal toexpression2.- =
expression1is equal toexpression2.
Comparison operators can be used with both numeric and string
variables. However, if one expression is numeric and the other is a
string, the numeric expression will always be “less
than” the string expression. If both
expression1 and
expression2 are strings, the
“greatest” string is the one that
is the longest. If the strings are of equal length, the comparison is
based on the value of the Option
Compare setting. If its value is
Binary, the comparison is case sensitive.
(Lowercase letters are “greater”
than their uppercase counterparts.) If its value is
Text, the comparison is not ...
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